If you have two explorer windows open, one for the c drive and one for the e drive, just highlight all the files you want to transfer and drag them over the the e drive window.
There really is no easy way to move programs from your C drive to your E drive. A person could copy them to new locations, but the program is likely to fail. It's best to make sure to choose the drive one wants the program installed on to avoid this problem
You open two My Computer windows and make them small. Next, you go to your c drive in one to where the file is. In the other one go to the e drive where you want to copy the file to. click the file and hold down the left mouse button. Drag the file to your other window and drop it in the e drive.
You could try moving your page file ~2M depending on memory usage or you hibernate file to the E drive. Otherwise you'll need to move "documents folder" to the E drive. You can try tweakui but I'm uncertain if it works on Vista.
Your hard disk has two partitions C & D that is why your cd/dvd drive has E.
E, DD, CC.. D, F/ A,C,E, DD,C,A,C,(C,A,C, slightly faster) D,E/ A,C,E,D,D.. E,C/ E,DD,C,A,C.. DE
Both letters are for Hard Disk drive because one hard disc is compartmentalized and these are named C drive, D drive & E Drive etc.
Drives D and E usually refers to CD/DVD drives. Put the source disk in drive d and the destination disk into drive 3, then copy from d to e.
Most of the time it is "C" the next drive letter in line would be "E" If you recently reformatted a single hard drive it will be "C" if you have another already formatted hard drive in your computer or you have a second partition it would be "E" So, unless you changed it, it is going to be "C".
peice p e i c e
A mnemonic device is something that allows a person to remember something. For example, the letters pvcqc and e would each have a sentence.
To find an inversion of a Chord, you simply move the lowest note in the chord up and octave and leave the rest the same. Alternatively, you can move the highest note in the chord down an octave. Example: C-E-G (C Major Root Position) E-G-C (C Major 1st Inversion) G-C-E (C Major 2nd Inversion
You just copy your data to the hard drive somehow. It is just a matter of finding out how the system identifies the hard drive and accessing that device.For instance, in MS-DOS, if you wanted to copy something to the hard drive you could issue a command such as:COPY A:\*.* C:\That would copy the entire contents of the root directory of the floppy in drive A: to the root directory of the hard drive identified as drive C:.On Windows, if you have something on a CD in drive E: that you want to copy to drive C:, you could just drag and drop it. Just open up the 2 windows that you want to copy between, make the selections on the source folder, and drag them to the window of the destination folder.